Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 02, 1892, Image 3

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    Demorratic Watch
Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 2, 1892.
——
Farm Notes.
If a farmer will goin debt the best
things that he should become in debt
for are manure and fertilizers.
The idea that all the light that a
stable needs is the trap-door manure
holes along the walls should be aban-
doned.
That cooking the food renders it
more easily digestible is {admitted, but
-the labor and cost of fuel are the ob-
stacles to overcome,
It is possible for a farmer to have no
weeds to kill, but it will require con-
stant cultivation and the destruction of
all weeds as fast as they appear.
A small evaporator, holding from
one-half to one bushel of fruit, may be
set upon the kitchen stove and run with
very little additional expense for fuel.
Tt the farmer would study the con-
struction of the feet of his horses, he
will be able to protected them against
the work of many inexperienced black-
smiths.
Vinegar will pay this year. Those
who are to far from market to ship
their apples at a proflt should convert
them into vinegar, as vinegar is salea-
ble at all seasons,
iC al al
Keeping an animal until age may
result in'a loss. The greatest gain 18
when an animal is young. After it
reaches maturity it may lose in weight
or gain but very little.
It requires the very best of manage-
ment to make the farm carry sufficient
manure to keep up the fertility of the
soil without using green manures or
commercial fertilizers.
If you have several kinds of melons
growing near each other do not save
any of the seed, or the next year’s crop
may prove unsatisfactory, owing to the
mixture of the varieties.
I know of no better trade mark than
the grower’s name, with well grown,
carefully assorted fruit, honestly put
in neat,clean packages of full capacity,
to back it up.—E. Williams.
An English gardener who has had
great success in raising radishes makes
his radish beds with nearly or quite
one-half soft coal ashes and soot. Un-
der this plan his beds are not infected
with worms.
The fence corner is the hotbed in
which the weeds are protected. When
a few weeds spring up in some protect-
ed place and produce seeds, the farmer
will have to begin all of the work of
weed killing over again.
The points of the compass can be
told from trees by very simple observa-
tions. The side of the tree upon which
moss is fcund is the north. If the trees
be exposed to the sun its heaviest and
longest limbs will be on the south side.
The corn crop is almost always a
paying one when its simplest demands
in the way of cultivation and fertiliza-
tion are complied with. On poor ground
without manure and not well worked,
it cannot be expected to give a gener-
ous return.—Farmers' Home Jourzal.
Pneumatic tires to wheels may ai
some day be used on farm wagons.
If so they will necessitate better roads.
Improved roads are now receiving
more attention than any other subject
that affects farming, and a great change
will take place before another decade.
Those who desire to produce a few
very choice fowls for their own tables
will secure something extra by crossing
the pit game male with Dorking hens.
The cross produces the best chicks and
fowls for the table, but the hens from
the cross are not the equal of some as
layers. 3
The individuality of each animal in
the herd must be always considered.
Each has its preferences and dislikes
and to secure the best results the wants
of each animal must be supplied. To
feed a herd so that all must eat the
same kind of food may be to surfeit
one animal while another may not be
supplied. There is no fixed rule for
“feeding any class of animals.
Land that is manured in the
fall will be in good condition in the
spring if the subsoil is heavy. A loss
often resuits when manure is spread
on unplowed land, due to washing of
the rains in winter, but if the manure
is turned under with a one-horse plow
the loss will be light, In the late fall
the hauling of the manure may be
done to better advantage, as the teams
are not then busy.
During the winter season, when no
work can be done outside, the labor
cau be profitably employed in cooking
the food, but what is wanted is an in-
vention that will lessen the cost of
heating the food. Warm food is in-
vigorating, and for that reason it may
be made profitable, as increased pro-
duction of milk is often obtained from
cooked food.
How many pounds of milk are re-
quired to make a pound of butter de-
ends on the breed and the character:
stice of the cows. Recent experiments
made show that it requires from 33 to
7% pounds of milk to make oue pound
of cream, and from 3% to 53 pounds of
cream to make one pound of butter.
No two cows give milk that is alike
in composition. About two pounds of
milk make one quart. ;
The solids in milk vary from 12 to
15} per cent., and after the water has
heen removed from the milk there will
still be no uniformity in the solids, as
they vary in their relative proportions
of fat, caseine, sugar, and mineral mat.
ter. There is probably no substance
eo lacking in uniformity as the milk
from different cows in a herd, 80 far as
quality is concerned. To adopt a uni-
form standard for milk is a very diffi- |
eult matter.
Josephine.
I was at Miners’ Creek in Idaho
when an incident happened that was
both amusing and uncomfortable.
“Who names this child 2’ said the
parson as he looked at the two mountain
specimens who had brought in their ba-
by to be ‘‘krisened.”
The man stepped forward and said
loud encugh for the rest of the school
house congregation to hear:
“ (Tain’t got no name yet. Me and
Sally couldn’t hitch on a name.”
“How will Joseph do ?”’ asked the
parson anxiously.
“I reckon that will do fust rate,” an-
swered the man, and as the woman did
not object the ceremony proceeded and
the infant was duly christened Joseph.
The mountaineer and his wife did not
stay to the rest of the service, as the
newly christened child had powerful
lungs and knew how to use them.
But the next day they returned and
brought some of their friends with them.
“Yer made a right smart kind of a
mistake,”’ said baby’s grandmother,
who accompanied it this time, ‘an’ I
"low it’s again the law, too. Yer Kris-
ened the baby Joseph.”
“And it’s a good name, too,” said the
parson, much surprised.
“Not for this ‘ere young un, I reckon.
Why, man alive, it's a gal.”
“Can’t help that,” said the parson
stoutly. “The objection come to late.
The father should have objected when I
offered the name.”
But here the parson’s wife came to
the rescue and with womanly tact sug-
gested a compromise on Josephine. and
the parson vowed that here after the
good woman should assist him in the ser-
vices to see that no illegal formula was
pronounced, as in this instance.
A Series of Awful Calamities.
A Typhoon Raged for Three Days, a Mountain
Opened and Swallowed People and Houses, and
Disastrous Floods are Reported. etc.
SAN Francisco, August 22.—The
Oriental steamship Gelic, which arrived
yesterday, brings details of enormous
loss of life by a typhoon, landslide and
earthquake in Japan. The typhoon
raged three days at Tokuskimi, and the
town was flooded. One hundred and
fifty people were drownad, 2,000 houses
swept away and 20,000 houses submerg-
ed. Twenty-five thousand people are
being fed by the Government. In Ako-
agun 300 people were drowned and 3.-
000 dwellings swept away. Landslides
on a mountain side in Otumera filled a
Zier and converted a valley into a huge
ake.
No details have been received, but
the people had no warning, and many
lives must have heen lost. Near Tokus-
himi a great fissure opened in the earth
at the base of the Hiji mountains, and
swallowed up houses and a hundred peo-
ple. Rumbling noises were heard for a
day oefore the disaster. The noises still
continue and the people have fled to the
hills. From Okuyama come reports of
terrible disastrous floods. Over 500
houses were submerged and 100 people
drowned.
The Japanese police are sea rcking for
two conspirators who sent boxes of
deadly explosives to Count Okuma and
two other members of the .Goveinment.
The boxes were represented as parcels
from friends, but the hand writing made
the recipients suspicious. Hach box
contained enough nitro-glycerine to kill
a dozen men, so arranged that any con-
cussion in opening the cover would ex-
plode it.
Effects of Heart.
Summer Vacations and Nerve Tonics Contrasted.
The expense as well as the impossi-
bility of leaving one’s business makes it
entirely out of the question for many
people to takea vacation, however bad
they may need it. In all cases, where
one can afford it, a vacation is proba-
bly preferable to tonics ; but for the tens
of thousands who can take no rest the
brain and nerve tonic ot modern medi-
cal science is an indispensable safe-
guard.
Nothing that is known tc the medical
profession to-day is the eqal of Pe-ru-na
in the cure or prevention of all derange-
ments due to hot weather. Pe ru-na
gives new vigor to the tired brain,
strength and quiet to the weakened
nerves, and as nearly supplies the need
of a vacation to the overworked man or
woman as it is possible for any remedy
to do. Pe-ru-na is a reliable specific for
nervous prostration, nerve exhaustion,
sleeplessness, and chronic malaria.
The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing
Company of Columbus, Ohio, publish
the Family Physician No. 1, devoted to
the treatment of malaria, Diarrhea
cholera morbus, and other diseases of
hot weather, which they will send free
to any address,
——The most costly book in the world
is declared to be a Hebrew Bible now in
Vatican, It is said that in 1512 Po
Jules 11 refused to se'l the Bible for its
weight in gold, which would amount to
$103,000. That is the greatest price
ever offered for a book.-New York Sun.
——Hood’s Sarsaparilla is in favor
with all classes because it combines
economy and strength. 100 Doses One
Dollar.
~——~(Gladstone is the Grand Old Man,
but Victoria doesn’t like to be called the
Grand Old Woman.
Druggist.
R. JAS. A. THOMPSON & CO.
APOTHECARIES,
| >
ALLEGHENY ST., = BELLEFONTE, Pa.
weet DEALERS I Noone
PURE } DRUGS, } MEDICINES
TOILET { ARTICLES
and every thing kept in a first class*Drug
Store.
37 14 6m
Business Notices.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Ca _toria.
When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria:
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Cas-
toria. 36 14 2y
Stimulants.
Why do physicians recommend Klein’s Sil-
ver Age and Duquesne Rye Whiskies ? Be-
cause, first, they are pure old and reliable—
because they have prescribed them: for their
patients, and found that no other medicine
would nourish and tone up the system so rap.
idly and thoroughly. Silver Age costs only
$1.50 per full quart, and Duquesne '1.25 per
quart. The best hotels and dealers in liquors
keep them for their choice customers. For
sale tothe trade generally by Simon Shloss
Williamsport Pa. 37-30
New Advertisements.
Puss 15 YEARS
UNDER DOCTOR'S TREATMENT FOUR
DIFFERENT TIMES. NO RELIEF
WHATEVER. CURED BY CUT-
ICURA.
I have used the Cuticura Remedies, and
found them to be justas you represented.
They have given me a perfect cure. I have
been troubled with pruritus for over fifteen
years, and have been under the doctor’s treat-
ment four different times, with no relief what-
ever, until I tried the Cuticura Remedies. After
using them Jase one week, I found that life
was not such a burden afterall, and am satis-
fied that I shall never be troubled again. Such
faith I have in your remedies. You can send
any one that is troubled with pruritus, and I
will satisfy them what it has done for me. I
will not restrict you from publishing this com-
munication, but would rather not. The reme-
dies are so good that it would be rather selfish
in me not to speak of their good qualities.
0.8. WILLIAMS,
89th St. and 1st Avenue, New York.
FACE FULL OF SORES
My face was all full of sores, and itched so
that I could scratch my face to pieces, and a
kind of watery fluid ran out. I had tried all
blood medicines except Cuticura Remedies,
which were the only ones that did me any
good My face is now ali clear, and I feel like
a new-born child. F. KRIETE,
153 Powers St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
CUTICURA RESOLVENT
The new Blood prrifier, internally (to cleanse
the blood of all impurities and poisonous ele-
ments,) and Cuticura the great Skin Cure, and
Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Skin Beautifier,
externally (to clear the skin and sealp and re-
store the hair,) have cured thousands of cases
where the shedding of scales measured a
a quart daily, the skin cracked, bleeding,
burning, and itching almost beyond endurance
hair lifeless or all gone suffering terrible
What other remedies have made such cures ?
Sold everywhere. Price, Curicura 50c.; SoA,
25¢.; REsoLVENT, $1.00. Prepared by the Por-
TER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Boston.
B=Send for “ How to Cure Skin Diseases,”
64 pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials.
[MPLES, black-heads, red rough
chapped, and oily skin cured by Cuti-
cura Soap.
1 STOPS THE PAIN
Back ache, kidney pains, weakness,
rheumatism, and muscular pains relieved in
one minute by the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plas-
ter. 25ec. 37-34-4t
Farmer’s Supplies.
QouTH BEND CHILLED PLOWS
SPRING TOOTH HARROWS,
CORN PLANTERS,
GRAIN DRILLS,
ASPINWALL POTATO PLANTER
PRICES REDUCED.
Pennsylvania Spring Hoed Two Horse
Cultivator, with two rowed
Corn Planter Attachment.
PRICES REDUCED.
Buggies, Pleasure Carts and Surreys
of the finest quality.
PRICES REDUCED.
CONKLIN WAGONS,
CHAMPION WAGONS,
FARM CARTS,
WHEEL-BARROWS.
PRICES REDUCED.
Champion Bho Crusher and Champion
BARBED WIRE,
both link and hog wire.
PRICES REDUCED.
CHURNS, WASHING MACHINES,
PUMPS, FEED © UTTERS,
LAWN MOWERS, FERTILIZERS,
FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS.
The best Implements for the least
money guaranteed.
Office and Store in the Hale building.
%6 4 McCALMONT & CO.
Philadelphia Card.
J oWarp W. MILLER,
WITH
WOOD, BROWN & CO.,
Dealers in
HOSIERY, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS &C.
429 Market Street:
151 PHILADELPHIA, PA.
——"
Gas Fitting.
M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and
Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa.
Pays perticular attentien to heatin buildings
by steam, copver smithing, rebrouzing gas fix
ruest, &c. 26
Sechler & Co.
Pure Malt Whisky.
re SELECTED
—==== BL ENDE
Jo[
D TEAS ——
It is a pretty well settled principal with all ex-
pert tea men that the highest perfection in tea can-
not be attained from any one kind or variety of fea
Plant. But that the best
can be obtained only by a
value and choicest flavor
skillful blending of care-
Jully selected high grade goods of different varieties.
When teas are perfectly blended the original flav-
or of each variety disappears in the blend, and from
the combination we get something entirely new and
much finer than any of the original flavors.
We have a new blend of our own.
In the prepa-
ration of which we have spent considerable time. and
labor and have also had the aid and counsel of sev-
eral as good tea men as are to be found in the Unit
ed States.
Jer the goods for sale and
20 be very superior both in
1t 1s with entire confidence that we of-
unhesitatingly claim them
value and flavor.
If you want a cup of ROYAL TEA, try our
new blended goods.
We also carry a full line of Teas, Oolongs, Ja-
pan, Young Hyson, Imperials, Gunpowder, Eng-
lish Breakfast, also several grades of blended goods,
and can suit the trade on
anything in the tea line.
You may not be exactly suited on the goods you are
using, and we feel confident that you will be able
Zo get from us just what you are wanting. We sell
Jine teas at very reasonable prices.
Try them.
We have a clean dry sugar S8lbs for jocts. the
cheapest sugar ever sold in Bellefonte.
Respectfully,
SECHLER & CO.
36-45 BELLEFONTE, PA.
Printing. Printing.
P= JOB PRINTING.
Fine Job Printing Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing,
Fine Job Printing:
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job|Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
FINEJOB PRINTING}
Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing,
—[AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE.{—
— comm oo ——
Oculists and Opticians.
REE EYE EXAMINATION,
—O UR ——
EYE SPECIALIST
will be in
~—=BELLEFONTE,—
—~MONDAY, SEPT. 21,—
at the
BROCKERHOFF HOUSE,
from 8.30 A. M. to 5 P. M., and will make xo
CHARGE to examine your eyes.
Persons who have headache or whose eyes |
are causing discomfort should call upon our
Specialist, and they will receive intelligent
and skillful attention.
NO CHARGE to examine your eyes.
Every pair of glasses ordered is guaranteed to
be satisfactory.
Music Boxes.
fae LATEST INVENTION IN
}—SWISS MUSIC BOXES.—i
They are the sweetest, most complete, dur-
able, and perfect Musical Boxes made,
i (warranted in every respect)] —
. and any number of tunes can be obtained
for them.
PAT. IN SWITZERLAND AND THE U.S.
We manufacture especially for direct fami-
ly trade and we guarantee our instruments far
superior to the Music Boxes usually made
for the wholesale trade, and sold by general
Merchandise, Drygoods or Music Stores.
Gem Concert Roller Organs. Lowest prices.
Old Music Boxes carefully repaired and im-
proved.
H. GAUTSCHI & SONS, Manufacturers,
QUEEN & CO,
1010 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa
Salesrooms, 1030 Chestnut Street,
36.46-18m Philadelphia.
Prcses
PURE BARLEY
MALT WHISKY!
DYSPEPSIA,
INDIGESTION,
2nd all wasting diseases can be
ENTIRELY CURED BY IT.
Malaria is completely eradicated from he
system by its use.
PERRINE'S
PURE BARLEY
MALT WHISKY
revives the energies of those worn with exces
sive bodily or mental effort. It acts as a SAFE
GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigo-
rous weather.
Take part of a wineglassful on your arrival
home after the labors of the day SL the same
quantity before your breakfast.” Being chemi.
cally pure, it commends itself to the medica.
profession.
WATCH THE LABEL.
Ph sid LB Blender nd
‘
None genuine unless bearing the signature
of the a on the label, oe gn
M. & J. 8. PERRINE,
3136 1y 38'N. Third 8t., Philadelphia.
Book Bindery.
Joe BOOK BINDERY.
[Established 1852.]
Haying the latest improved machinery I am
repared to
BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES
of all descriptions, or to rebind old books,
Special attention given to the ruling of paper
and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS.
Orders will be received at this office, or ad-
dress F. L. BUTTER,
Book Binaer Third and Market Streets,
25 18 Harrisburg, Pa.
Saddlery.
SS CHOFIELDS NEW
HARNESS HOUSE.
We extend a most cordial invitation to our
patrons and the public, in general, to witness
one of the
GRANDEST DISPLAYS OF
Light and Heavy Harness
ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will
be made in the large room, formerly occupied
by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has been
added to my factory and will be used exclu-
sively for the sale of harness, being the first
exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as
heretofore the custom has been to sell goods
in the room in which they were made. This
elegant room has been refitted and furnished
with glass cases in which the harness cam be
nicely displayed and still kept away from
heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in
leather. Our factory now occupies a room
16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes it
the largest establishment of its kind outside
of Philadelphia and Pittsburg.
We are prepared to offer better bargains in
the future than we have done in the past and
we want everyone to see our goods and get
prices for when you do this, out of self defense
Ly will buy. Our profits are not large, but
y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in
Bellefonte. We are not indulging in idle
philanthropy. It is purely business. We are
not making much, but trade is growing and
that is what we are interested in now. fits
will take care of themselves.
When other houses discharged their work-
men during the winter they were all put to
work in my factory, nevertheless the bi a
hous 3 of this cityand county would smile
we compared ourselves to them, but we do not
mean to be so odious, except to venture the ase
section that none of them can say, as we can
say “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE
CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story.
The following are x constantly on hand.
50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from
$8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE
STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per
Se1325.00 and upwards Jo HORS
COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00
each, over $100.00 worth of
HARNESS OILS and
AXLE GREASE,
$400 worth of Fly Nete sold cheap
$150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Combs
poness; Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per
pound. We kee! Srenvibingto be found ina
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang.
ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two
shops in the same town to catch trade—NO
SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prices.
Four harness-makers at steady work this wine
ter, This is our idea of protection to labor,
when other houses discharged their hands,
they soon found work with us.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
38 37
INuminating Oil.
Cees ACME. }
THE REST
BURNING CIT.
CHAT CAN BE MADF
FROM PETROLEUM
It gives a Brilliant Light
It will not Smoke the Chimney.
It will Not Char the Wick.
It has a High Fire Test.
It does Not Explode.
It is without an equal
AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL.
We stake our reputation as refiners that
IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD.
Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by
ACME OIL CO.,
84 85 1y Williamsport, Pa.
For sale a retail by W. T. TWITMIRE,